Which Way Is the Front Line from Here? The Life and Time of Tim
- Type:
- Video > HD - TV shows
- Files:
- 1
- Size:
- 1.53 GB
- Info:
- IMDB
- Spoken language(s):
- English
- Texted language(s):
- English
- Tag(s):
- Which Way Is the Front Line fr
- Uploaded:
- May 12, 2013
- By:
- knix14760
[img]http://i1355.photobucket.com/albums/q701/vidsnmore/Whichwaytothefrontlines_zps921338e4.gif?t=1366584798[/img] In their 2010 documentary Restrepo, photojournalists Sebastian Junger and Tim Hetherington embedded themselves for 15 months with a U.S. platoon in AfghanistanΓÇÖs Korengal Valley. The doc was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary in January 2011. A few short months later, Hetherington was killed by mortar shells while photographing the front lines of the Libyan civil war. Which Way Is the Front Line From Here? is his family and friendsΓÇÖ collective grieving ΓÇô catharsis by celebration and a deeply felt sense of admiration for the British-American war photographer who captured modern warfare with searing realism by rebuking one of journalismΓÇÖs greatest textbook tenets: Never make the story about yourself. This intimate portrait, directed by Junger, also eschews objectivity, but in favor of pathos, communicating just as pointedly as Hetherington transmitted emotion through his work. Using shots culled from his comrades, as well as ghostly found footage, the documentary traces HetheringtonΓÇÖs career photographing conflicts in West Africa and the Middle East, right up to the final moments before his death. And while there are plenty of interspersed interviews with family and colleagues from the field, much of what we see is from behind HetheringtonΓÇÖs camera. As affable a presence as Hetherington was, he was a workaholic; his work was his life, and this doc is Junger assembling the chapters of a years-in-the-making video memoir. That it comes too soon is rendered in the swelling, pained eyes of his longtime field partner, James Brabazon, whose tearful breakdown is perhaps the filmΓÇÖs most devastating moment. As it should be, thereΓÇÖs heavy emphasis on HetheringtonΓÇÖs work. But this isnΓÇÖt a movie about the photojournalistic process, military stratagems, or political posturing. ItΓÇÖs about HetheringtonΓÇÖs almost intimate understanding that art is felt ΓÇô and more often than not, that feeling is overwhelming pain. You see it in his photos: the desperate, lonely faces of Liberian children, the piercing and guttural pang of defeat felt by a solider who loses his brother-in-arms. Hetherington was a masterful journalist exposing the world to its obscured horror, but he was only able to capture it by becoming so close to the terror that he felt it too. The sequences stitched together by Junger, which include segments from HetheringtonΓÇÖs Faulknerian and autobiographical short film Diary, indicate the skill of a fledging filmmaker on the verge on his own breakthrough. He had a tight, closed-in feel to his images and video that made it feel like you were being captured inside moments with HetheringtonΓÇÖs subjects ΓÇô a weird, transfixing layering effect that came from an auteur who maybe cared a little too much. [b]Video[/b] Format : MPEG-4 ID : 1 Format : AVC Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec Format profile : High@L4.0 Format settings, CABAC : Yes Format settings, ReFrames : 3 frames Codec ID : avc1 Codec ID/Info : Advanced Video Coding Duration : 1h 17mn Source duration : 1h 17mn Bit rate : 2 194 Kbps Width : 1 920 pixels Height : 1 080 pixels [b]Audio[/b] Format : AAC
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